In 1637, the discalced Trinitarian Convent of Madrid presented a claim to the
bureo of the Household of queen Isabel de Borbon about the non-payment of the
pay signs of the duchess de la Laguna, who named this convent as beneficiary. This
fact, strengthened by the failure of the economic reforms projected by the Count
Duke of Olivares for the queen’s Household, the lack of a protector patronage, and
the conditions imposed by the radicalism of the discalced reform, created significant
inconveniencies to the survival of this convent